User's Manual
UHF Wireless Diversity Receiver  
Rio Rancho, NM
5
Digital Pulse Counting Detector
The R400A receiver uses an elegantly simple, yet high-
ly effective digital pulse detector to demodulate the FM 
signal, rather than a conventional quadrature detector. 
This unusual design eliminates thermal drift, improves 
AM rejection, and provides very low audio distortion. 
The output from the Digital Pulse Counter is an analog 
signal containing the digital audio information. This sig-
nal is fed through a low pass filter to an A-D Converter 
in the Digital Signal Processing section.
Frequency Tuning Groups
The R400A provides four “factory set” compatible 
frequency groups (A through D) and two user program-
mable frequency groups (U and V).
The factory groups have been selected to avoid in-
termodulation problems. Each group includes eight 
channels.
The user programmable frequency groups can have up 
to 16 frequencies per group.
Microprocessor, 
PLL and VCO Circuits
An 8-bit microprocessor monitors user command inputs 
from the front panel control buttons and numerous other 
internal signals such as RF level, audio levels, pilot tone 
levels and external power voltage. The microprocessor 
also drives the LCD display, controls the squelch and 
audio output attenuator, and operates the PLL/VCO 
circuits and the antenna phase switch.
Digital Signal Processor
The DSP reconstructs the original digitized audio from 
the A-D Converter and detects the ultrasonic Pilot Tone. 
The DSP also incorporates an RF-controlled digital 
noise filter (in addition to SmartNR
™
). This RF sensitive 
variable frequency filter reduces high frequency re-
sponse under extremely weak RF conditions. The filter 
does nothing until the RF signal strength drops below 
3uV, at which point it begins to roll off high frequencies. 
Usable audio remains unaffected, but noise-ups or “hits” 
occurring near the fringe of reception sound much less 
harsh.
The reconstructed original analog audio signal is then 
sent to the audio output section.
Smart Tuning (SmartTune
™
)
A major problem facing wireless users is finding clear 
operating frequencies, especially in RF saturated envi-
ronments. SmartTune™ overcomes this problem by au-
tomatically scaning all the frequencies available in the 
receiver’s frequency block and tuning the receiver to the 
frequency with the lowest RF interference, significantly 
reducing setup time.
Compatibility Modes
The R400A receiver was designed to operate with 
Lectrosonics 400 Series transmitters and will yield the 
best performance when doing so. However, due to the 
flexibility of digital signal processing, the R400A is also 
able to operate with Lectrosonics 200 Series, 100 Se-
ries and IFB transmitters, and certain non-Lectrosonics 
transmitters in special compatibility modes. (Contact 
the Lectrosonics Sales Department for a complete list 
of compatible transmitters.)
DSP-Based Pilot Tone
The 400 Series system design uses a DSP generated 
ultrasonic pilot tone from the transmitter to control the 
receiver audio muting (squelch). If the Pilot Tone is en-
abled, a Pilot Tone Detect signal generated by the DSP 
automatically controls the receiver’s squelch. Built-in 
brief delays are also incorporated to eliminate the 
thumps, pops or other transients that can occur when 
the transmitter is turned on or off.
The pilot tone frequency is different for each of the 256 
frequencies in the tuning range of a system (frequency 
block). This eliminates squelch problems in multichan-
nel systems where a pilot tone signal can appear in the 
wrong receiver via intermodulation products. Using the 
DSP to detect the pilot tone also eliminates the need for 
fragile crystals, allowing the receiver to survive shocks 
and mishandling much better than older analog-based 
pilot tone systems.
Note: The above description applies only in 400 
Series mode. In other modes requiring pilot tones, 
only one pilot tone frequency is used 
on all channels.
Smart Squelch
™
The R400A employs a sophisticated squelching system 
in an attempt to deliver the cleanest possible audio dur-
ing marginal conditions of reception. Any squelching 
system faces inevitable trade-offs: Squelch too much 
and valuable audio information may be lost, squelch 
too little and excessive noise may be heard; respond 
too rapidly and the audio sounds “choppy,” respond too 
sluggishly and syllables or entire words can be cut off. 
The R400A combines several techniques to achieve an 
optimal balance, removing distracting noise without the 
squelching action itself becoming a distraction. One of 
these techniques involves waiting for a word or syllable 
to complete before squelching. Another incorporates 
recent squelching history and recent signal strength, 
adjusting squelching behavior dynamically for the most 
serviceable result under variable conditions. Using 
these and other techniques, the R400A can deliver ac-
ceptable audio quality from otherwise unusable signals.
In the PILOT TONE BYPASS mode, the squelch system 
is disabled. Received audio remains unmuted at all 
times with this setting.










